Last week, Bouteflika said the state of emergency -- imposed since a brutal Islamist insurgency killed an estimated 200,000 people in the 1990s -- would be lifted "in the very near future."

Demonstrators in Paris wave Algerian and Egyptian flags as they call for regime change in Algeria on February 12.

Inspiring Protests

Just as Egypt's protesters took inspiration from Tunisia -- where a popular revolt brought down the regime of President Zine el-Abidine ben Ali last month -- the Egyptian revolution has rocked the Arab world, triggering demonstrations against authoritarian regimes in Algeria and Yemen, and calls for protests in Syria and Morocco.

In Yemen on February 12, protester Ahmed Omar said he hoped the events in Cairo and Tunis were a taste of what's to come.

"What we want is to demand the rights of all people and overthrow the regime, the president must leave just like Hosni Mubarak and the Tunisian president," he said.

"They must go, this is the first and last demand, we want to establish a modern democratic state, which includes all the Yemeni people," he said.

Signs Of Weakness?

Yemen's President Saleh, who rules the Arab world's poorest country, has promised to step down in 2013 and called for opposition groups to join a unity government. It's unclear what effect that will have as unrest continues to spread to other countries.

In Bahrain, activists have called for protests on February 14 against King Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa, who on February 11 announced he would give 1,000 dinars ($2,650) to each Bahraini family.

The handful of protesters who remain say they won’t leave until the military announces concrete plans to hand over power to a civilian administration.

The effects of Egypt's uprising are also being felt in Iran, which has compared the revolt to its own 1979 Islamic Revolution, which brought a hard-line Islamist regime to power.

But reports from Iran say the government is disrupting mobile-phone communications and slowing Internet speed to undermine protests called for February 14. Satellite television has also been jammed and news from Egypt censored.

And in Tunisia, the country that started the wave of unrest, there's been ongoing turmoil since President ben Ali fled in January. Italy has declared a humanitarian emergency after almost 3,000 Tunisian migrants arrived there, many in small boats, in the last few days.